Carol Martin died after she contracted a flesh-eating bacteria during a vacation to Florida.
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An Indianapolis woman died Saturday after she contracted a flesh-eating bacteria during a vacation in Florida, but her husband believes she would still be alive today if doctors had diagnosed her earlier.

Carol Martin traveled to Clearwater, Fla., for a family vacation and to watch racing in February, WFLA reported. Her husband, Richard Martin, said his wife loved racing and looked forward to traveling to Florida every year to watch.

"She loved going down to the racetrack. Every year, she couldn't wait to get to Florida to be there, you know," Martin told WFLA.

After the family returned from their trip, Carol noticed she had a sore on her buttock.

"She had like a pimple come up on her right butt cheek. She said it was kind of painful," Martin said.

Martin said his wife went to the doctor’s office twice to get the sore checked out. Both times she was sent home with antibiotics and a heating pad.

However, the infection worsened and a biopsy was done which found Carol had contracted necrotizing fasciitis, a "serious bacterial skin infection" that only affects between 600 and 1,200 people in the U.S. each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control.